Avoiding Big Insurance Hikes
Wednesday, 25. July 2018
I have to say that I fall foul of this one myself. Do you allow your car insurance to auto-renew or do you compare rates? It has been a concern of the regulators for years but they’ve done very little about it. In one report a driver had his premium increased by over £200 with no explanation even though his car and circumstances hadn’t changed.
For ages the insurers have rolled out the same old tired excuses – hikes in Premium Tax Rates, increased cost of repairs and increased vehicle thefts. OK, we can see that but a rise of £200 – get outa here.
Some insurers we know offer cheap 1st-year rates to capture new customers in the knowledge that a large number won’t shop around and will remain with them in future years when they can increase the premiums. That being the case it opens the door to consistently achieving low rates if you swap every year.
In the meantime, the British Insurance Brokers Association (BIBA) and the Association of British Insurers (ABI) have signed up to an agreement to prevent ‘excessive’ premium hikes when ‘auto renewing’.
Insurers will be expected to be more transparent and advise customers that rates could increase in the future and they will also need to review rates for long-term customers. That all sounds very good but I simply don’t believe them. First of all what constitutes an ‘excessive’ increase?
And in the second place what penalties will be doled out? No answer to either question was forthcoming. Maybe a step in the right direction but in the meantime stop auto-renewing and search the internet for better deals. By Graham Hill